The Apprentice | |
---|---|
Genre | Reality game show |
Created by | Mark Burnett |
Starring |
Lord Sugar (2005-present) Nick Hewer (2005-2014) Margaret Mountford (2005-2009) Karren Brady (2010-present) Claude Littner (2015-present) |
Narrated by | Mark Halliley |
Theme music composer | Dru Masters |
Opening theme | "Dance of the Knights" by Prokofiev |
Country of origin | United Kingdom |
Original language(s) | English |
No. of series | 12 |
No. of episodes | 132 |
Production | |
Running time | 60 minutes |
Production company(s) |
Talkback (2005) Talkback Thames (2006–11) Boundless (2012–) Mark Burnett Productions (2006–13) United Artists Media Group (2014–) |
Distributor | FremantleMedia |
Release | |
Original network |
BBC Two (2005–06) BBC One (2007–) |
Picture format | 16:9 (1080i HDTV) |
Original release | 16 February 2005 | – present
Chronology | |
Related shows |
The Apprentice (US version) The Apprentice (Irish version) The Apprentice: You're Fired! Young Apprentice |
External links | |
Website | www |
The Apprentice is a British reality game show in which a group of aspiring businessmen and women compete against each other in a series of business related challenges, in order to win a prize offered by British business magnate, Lord (Alan) Sugar. For series one to six, the prize was to become his "apprentice" and work at his former company, Amstrad (sold to BSkyB in 2007), or one of his other companies, Viglen,Amsprop or Amshold, receiving a six-figure salary, but since the seventh series, the prize is £250,000 investment towards a business of the candidate's creation, with Sugar as a 50% owner. Rumours of a UK version of The Apprentice were confirmed in early 2004 by FremantleMedia, with the BBC successfully outbidding Channel 4 to secure the rights for the show. Billed as a "job interview from hell", the programme operates in very similar format to that of the American original, with its creator Mark Burnett producing the UK version; Lord Sugar became the finalised choice to head the programme's first series, after the broadcaster's initial choices, Philip Green, Felix Dennis and Michael O'Leary, turned down the offer to head the show, whereupon he returned for subsequent series after this, despite initial doubts he wouldn't for the second series.
Each series of the programme consists of twelve episodes, and the first two series were aired on BBC Two in 2005 and 2006 respectively, before its success led the BBC to commission more series and move the show over to BBC One; subsequent series were usually shown in the Spring, or delayed to the Autumn to avoid clashing with major political and sporting events being held in that year. During the broadcast of the twelfth series in late 2016, it was confirmed that applications had opened for a thirteenth series, to be aired in 2017.